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EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD

EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD. Basic Premise Associated With Psycho-social Development. Personality development is determined by stress which is caused by social factors in consort with innate biological predispositions.

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EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD

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  1. EMOTIONAL AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD

  2. Basic Premise Associated With Psycho-social Development • Personality development is determined by stress which is caused by social factors in consort with innate biological predispositions. • It is both the individual’s life experiences and his internal crisis which acts as a catylist to personality outcomes.

  3. Erikson’s Psychosocial Model • Internal crises which must have resolution to facilitate healthy personality development • Trust vs. Mistrust • Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt • Initiative vs. Guilt • Industry vs. Inferiority • Identity vs. Confusion • Intimacy vs. Isolation • Generativity vs. Stagnation • Integrity vs. Despair • Quality of resolution may be related to quality of personality development

  4. PSYCHOSOCIAL DEVELOPMENT • Erikson’s Industry vs. Inferiority • According to Erikson, a combination of adult expectations and children’s drive towards mastery creates the crisis in this stage. • Formal schooling and socialization. Children are learning roles and talents.

  5. Self-Development/Middle Childhood • Changes in self concept occur between ages 8 – 11. Children begin to: • Describe self in psychological traits • Compare self to peers (social comparisons) • Speculate about their strength and weaknesses • C. H. Cooley—Looking Glass Concept

  6. Self Development in M. Childhood • Children increase in the development of perspective taking. • Between ages 8 and 15, children start to depend more on peers for feedback. However, parents continue to remain influential. • Development of self varies across cultures. • In US, we promote independence and uniqueness. Self is defined from the individual. • Asian parents promote harmonious interdependence. Self is defined from the social group.

  7. Development of Self-Esteem • Self-esteem refers to judgments children make about their own worth. • Self-esteem generally declines in Middle Childhood due to increased feedback from peers and school. • According to Harter (1982), Self-Esteem can be observed as: • Academic • Social • Physical

  8. Influences on Self-Esteem • With high self-esteem, children work harder in school and artistic expression. They generally display greater prosocial behaviors. • Culture plays an influential role in self-esteem development. • Asian children tend to have lower self-esteem than US children. • Parenting styles also influence self-esteem development. • Which parenting style is most effective towards self-esteem development? • Does optimal parenting style vary as a function of culture?

  9. Self Concept and Attributions • Attributions are our common, everyday explanations for the causes of behavior. • Children with high self-esteem develop demonstrate mastery attributions: • mastery-oriented attributions. Attributions that credit success to high ability and failure to insufficient efforts. • Learned helplessness attributions. Attributions that credit success to luck or failure to low ability.

  10. Emotional Development • Key develops: • Empathy. During middle childhood, children develop a sensitivity to the feelings of others. • Emotional Self-Regulation. The ability to manage negative emotions that threaten self development. Coping and problem-solving increases during this period. • Girls with poor self-regulation tend to freeze with anxiety. • Boys with poor self-regulation tend to lash out with hostility. • Children raised in institutions tend to have poor self-regulation.

  11. Development of Competence in Middle Childhood • Adjusting in School. • This becomes the 1st real test of social preparedness for middle schoolers. Key determinate for social integration. • Establishing Peer Relationships. • The quality of peer/friend alliances become a key marker for later adaptation in society. • Learning to play by the rules. • Rule-abiding as opposed to rule-breaking often predicts social and academic competence over the next decade. • Achieving Academically. • The ability to perform academically affects children’s perception of self and consequently contribute to efforts toward performance.

  12. Relationship Development During Middle Childhood • Parent/Child Relationships • Children spend about 50% less time with their parents than their preschool years • Family support remains important as children practice their developing skills in society • Optimal development occurs when parents employ structured autonomy. Quality relationship (Authoritative) is correlated with • academic performance (positive) • peer relationships (positive) • befriending of delinquent peers (lower) • Aggression (lower) • conflict in the classroom (lower) • Because children model, parents teach competence through their actions

  13. Family Constellations Among Middle Schoolers • Over 50% of children born in 1990s experienced divorcing parents. • African-American children are at a higher risk (Why?) • African-American children are at greater risk to becoming single parents (Why?) • Both African-American and Hispanic families are less likely to remarry after divorce • 50% of children of divorce can expect to have step fathers within 4 years.

  14. Family Constellations Among Middle Schoolers, Cont. • Most single parent families lack fathers • Some studies show: • Greater atmosphere of warmth • Increased mother interaction with children • More secure mother/child attachments • On the other hand: • These children tend to grow up feeling less cognitively and physically competent

  15. Family Constellation Cont. • Factors Associated With Divorce and Child Outcomes • Quality of Interaction • A vast majority of children of divorce adjust well to the changing family arrangement • Quality of parenting is more important than family arrangement • Developmental Stage • Preschoolers tend to display greater adjustment problems than middle schoolers (Why?) • Remarriage is more likely to have a lasting psychological impact on pre-adolescents (Why?) • Gender • Boys tend to have a more difficult time adjusting to divorce in middle school (Why?) • Boys are more likely to act out or externalize overtly. Girls are more likely to act out internally (i.e., engaging in self-blame, depression)

  16. Thought Process Implosion

  17. Implosion Theory • The child is experiencing rapid changes both internal and external • In part, internal changes are in response to external changes; external changes are in response to internal changes. • While trying to achieve a balance, what happens when the internal factors are depleted or diminished? What of my character? What of my motivation to thrive?

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